Pike says the stolen wine included bottles of Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, where the winery owners use laser and digital technology on corks and capsules to curb counterfeiting and theft. A single bottle can cost up to $10,000. Screaming Eagle wines were also stolen.

Pike said 72 bottles of wine were recovered Wednesday from a wine buyer who was not aware the wine had been stolen. Restaurant staff said in December that 76 bottles of wine were stolen.

Investigators are looking into the possibility that people connected to the restaurant stole the wine.

While Chef and owner Thomas Keller did not specify the total number or value of stolen bottles, the Napa Sheriff’s officials said an initial investigation pegged the lost inventory at 40 to 50 bottles.

Pike had previously told NBC Bay Area the wine went missing sometime after 2 p.m. on Christmas during a “brief window where there was nobody there” at the site, which he said he was told is typically staffed 24-7. The three Michelin-starred restaurant had closed for planned renovation.